Home / Publications / Journals / Nuclear Technology / Volume 138 / Number 1
Nuclear Technology / Volume 138 / Number 1 / April 2002 / Pages 79-89
Technical Note / Thermal Hydraulics / dx.doi.org/10.13182/NT02-A3279
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
An analysis is presented of the integral behavior of the external cooling of a reactor vessel by natural circulation during a severe accident to investigate the feasibility of the in-vessel retention strategy for a high-power reactor by using the RELAP5/MOD3 computer code. It is shown that two-phase flow instability phenomena, including natural-circulation oscillation and density wave oscillations, affect the local thermal margin at the reactor vessel wall. The heat load on the reactor vessel is simplified as a uniform heat flux load of 600 kW/m2 in the base case. A sensitivity study for the effect of the inlet K factor, nonuniform heat flux distribution, inlet flow area, and subcooling of the pool water is performed to evaluate the local thermal margin. The results of the analysis show that natural-circulation cooling is marginal at this level of heat flux. It also clearly indicates that a system level of analysis for two-phase natural circulation, including the sensitivity study on the design parameters, is necessary to ensure successful implementation of the external cooling.